Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures v. Butler

12 N.J. Eq. 498
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 N.J. Eq. 498 (Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures v. Butler, 12 N.J. Eq. 498 (N.J. 1859).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Green, O. J".

The complainants filed their bill in the Court of Chancery to restrain the Society, &c., from making certain proposed alterations in the mode of drawing water from the upper raceway of their works at Paterson, in violation of an agreement between the parties. An injunction issued pursuant to the prayer of the bill. The defendants, having answered the bill, moved for a dissolution of the injunction. The motion was denied. Prom this order denying the motion to dissolve the injunction the defendants appealed. The question for the consideration of this court is, whether, upon the facts disclosed in the bill, answer, and affidavits, the injunction should have been continued.

The defendants are the owners of the water power and privileges at Paterson. The complainants are the lessees, under different agreements, of eight square feet of water, drawn from the upper canal or raceway of the defendants. The water is used by the complainants as power for carrying on a very valuable and extensive paper mill, owned by them. The bill charges, that owing to uncertainty as to the head of water in the raceway, difficulty arose between the society and their tenants; that the complainants refused, on this account, to pay their rent, and an action having been brought by the society for its recovery, they pleaded an eviction of a part of the premises de-c mised, and insisted that they were entitled to a definite head of water, which the society had no right to reduce or draw down. In the progress of the trial, the suit was compromised by the execution of a written agreement, executed for the permanent settlement of the said dispute and difficulty. Such are the allegations of the bill, and for the present purpose they will be considered as true.

[501]*501The first question arises upon the true interpretation of this agreement. The injunction restrains the defendants from putting any gate or gates in the side of the upper canals in violation of the agreement. Is the construction of the gate a violation of the agreement ? It is certainly no violation of the terms of the agreement. There is no stipulation by the society that no gate shall be constructed in the side of the raceway. If the agreement created such an obligation, it is by implication only. At the date of the agreement there were two weirs in the upper canal. The one was above the complainants’ mill, over which the waste water flowed, and through a gate in which the water was occasionally drawn into the lower levels. The other weir was below the complainants’ mill. The stipulations of the agreement are—

1. That instead of the water in the canal being discharged at the pitch or weir above the complainants’ mill, a new weir shall be constructed below the mill, the top of which shall be on a level with the existing weir near the lower end of the race, and the length of which shall be sixty feet, and at the option of the society, may be one hundred feet.

2. That the existing weir above the complainants’ mill shall be elevated so as to compel the waste water in the canal to pass over, and be discharged at the new waste weir below the mill.

3. That the gate in the weir above the mill shall not be lifted for the discharge of water from the canal, except in emergencies.

Now these plain and express stipulations secured to’ the lessees these great advantages, viz.

1. That the waste water of the race should always bo discharged below their mill, and not above it, so that it should necessarily flow by their mill before being discharged.

2. That the waste water should be discharged over a waste weir of a given height, thereby fixing, by necessary [502]*502implication, the ordinary head of water in the race when there was a supply.

3. That the gate above the complainants’ mill should not be raised to discharge water from the race, except in emergencies, so that on ordinary occasions the water from the race could only be discharged by means of a gate below the mill.

To these terms the complainants now seek to add others, viz.

That no gate whatever shall be constructed in the canal below the plaintiffs’ mill for any purpose whatever, and that the entire water of the canal, when the mills are stopped, shall be forced over the waste weir.

The contract, in very plain terms, states that the defendants shall not discharge water from the race by means of an existing gate above the mill, and that the waste water shall be discharged over the waste weir. And this, it is insisted, means that the water shall not be discharged by any gate above or below the mill, and that all the water shall flow over the waste weir. And this entire change in the effect of the contract is to be produced by holding waste water to mean all the water which is not leased, or which, if leased, is not used by the lessees for the time being. It manifestly may mean, and ordinarily does mean, the superfluous water in the race when the works are in operation.

The construction sought to be given to this contract by the complainants is inadmissible, because it is not within the purview of the contract, and could not have been within the contemplation of the parties. The design of the contract, according to the complainants’ own bill, was to fix a definite head, and to prevent the society fi’om reducing or drawing down the water below that head. How the head is fixed by the elevation of the top of the waste weir, and the complainants insist not only that the water shall not be' drawn below that point, but that it shall be raised above it. It is not pretended that this contract [503]*503requires the defendants to send any specified quantity of water over the waste weir. It puts no restraint upon them in selling or leasing power. They have the unquestioned right of leasing and of using every drop of water that flows into the canal. If a lease falls in to-day, they may release it or use it to-morrow. They may exclude the water from the race, except so far as is necessary to supply the wants of the lessees. Every lessee may use or waste his own water as he pleases. The complainants do not claim a vested right to the flow of a drop of water beyond what their lease specifies, nor to a particle of head above the point designated in the contract. And yet they insist that, if every mill upon the race but their own surrenders its lease, or ceases operation; nay if their own mill stops also, the defendants are not at liberty to discharge the water from the race through a gate, but that the whole water of the river is converted into waste water, and must be forced over the top of the waste weir. Could any such contract ever have, been contemplated, much less consummated, by reasonable men ?

If any such result was contemplated, it would surely have been expressed in clear and unequivocal language, and not left to inference.

But if this view be erroneous, and if it must be regarded as a necessary implication, from the terms of the contract, that no gate shall be placed in the side of the race, but that all the water shall be forced as waste water over the waste weir, then the contract subjects the defendants to great obvious prejudice, without any corresponding benefit to the complainants. It gives to them an unfair and unconscionable advantage, which a court of equity will not enforce by injunction, but will leave the complainants to their remedy at law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 N.J. Eq. 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/society-for-establishing-useful-manufactures-v-butler-nj-1859.